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Abstract Number: 1946

Can Satisfactory Reliability Of The 7-Joint Ultrasound Score Be Attained By Inexperienced Readers In a Single Calibration Exercise? Results From The Biodam Program

Marina Backhaus1, Stephanie G. Werner1, Sarah Ohrndorf1, Shafeeq Alraqi2, Sean Crowther3, Sukhvinder Dhillon3, Navjot Dhindsa4, Arthur J. Fernandes5, Oliver FitzGerald6, Hilde B. Hammer7, Christophe Hudry8, Sandrine Jousse-Joulin9, Robert GW Lambert3, Maggie Larche10, Anouck Remy-Moulard11, Lene Terslev12, Ramin Yazdani13, Rana Dadashova14, Joel Paschke14 and Walter P. Maksymowych15, 1Rheumatology/Immunology, Charite University Hospital, Berlin, Germany, 2Rheumatology, St. Vincent's University Hospital, Dublin, Ireland, 3Radiology, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Canada, 4Medicine, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, MB, Canada, 5Rheumatology, Universite de Sherbrooke, Sherbrooke, QC, Canada, 6Department of Rheumatology, St.Vincent's University Hospital, Dublin, Ireland, 7Dept of Rheumatology, Diakonhjemmet Hospital, Oslo, Norway, 8Rheumatology, Hopital Cochin, Paris, France, 9Rheumatology/Immunology, CHU de la Cavale Blanche, Brest, France, 10McMaster University, Hamilton, ON, Canada, 11Hopital Peyronie, Montpellier, France, 12Copenhagen University Hospital at Glostrup, Copenhagen, Denmark, 13St.Clare's Mercy Hospital, St.John's, NF, Canada, 14CaRE Arthritis, Edmonton, AB, Canada, 15Medicine, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Canada

Meeting: 2013 ACR/ARHP Annual Meeting

Keywords: rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and ultrasonography, Validity

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Session Information

Title: Imaging in Rheumatoid Arthritis

Session Type: Abstract Submissions (ACR)

Background/Purpose: While ultrasound assessment of patients with RA using the 7-joint score (US7) demonstrates reliability in the hands of experienced readers it is unclear to what degree this has external validity, and whether satisfactory calibration can be attained over the course of a single calibration exercise conducted over one day at a single location. We aimed to assess the feasibility and impact on inter-reader reliability of a one-day structured program of training based on an eCRF designed to provide real-time feedback on reader reliability during the process of scanning.

Methods: Six patients with rheumatoid arthritis were examined by 12 sonologists from 6 countries and 12 centers in 6 rater pairs who performed the US7 score (1). The US7 score includes the clinically dominant wrist, the second and third metacarpophalangeal (MCP) and proximal interphalangeal joints, and the second and fifth metatarsophalangeal (MTP) joints, which were evaluated for synovitis (SYN), tenosynovitis/paratenonitis (TS), and erosions (ER) from the dorsal side and palmar/plantar aspects by gray-scale (GS) and power Doppler (PD) ultrasound. Additional lateral scans were performed at the MCP2 and MTP5 joints. Scores were entered into an eCRF custom designed to provide immediate calculation of reliability data (eCaRe-US reliability). Training of readers focused on the most discrepant features observed in exercise 1. All reader pairs repeated the examination in different patient order. Mean (SD) weighted kappa values, mean (SD) per cent agreement rates, inter-observer intra-class correlation (ICC) for summed scores (SYN, TS, ER) were calculated.

Results: Improvement in reliability was mainly observed in assessment of SYN-GS and PD. Primary regions of improvement in SYN-GS were dorso-median and ulnar wrist (k 0.31 to 0.54 and 0.17 to 0.34), PIP2 and 3 dorsal (k 0.03 to 1 and 0.13 to 1), MCP2 and 3 palmar (k 0.04 to 0.37 and 0.06 to 1.0), and MTP5 dorsal (k 0.06 to 1.0). Improvement in detection of SYN-PD was mainly observed in the wrist. Regions where reliability was not improved were MCP2 dorsal, PIP2 and 3 palmar, and MTP2 dorsal.  Erosion assessment was lengthy and considered challenging for routine practice.

 

Ex

SYN-GS

SYN-PD

TS-GS

TS-PD

ER

% agree

1

39.8 (25.9)

75.6 (25.9)

60.0(19.0)

80.0(13.9)

67.8(24.0)

 

2

48.7 (41.6)

73.1 (26.0)

53.3(32.1)

80.0(18.3)

nd

kappa

1

0.12 (0.10)

0.53 (0.47)

0.40 (0.22)

0.40 (0.42)

0.29 (0.35)

 

2

0.47 (0.40)

0.45 (0.43)

0.31(0.31)

0.30 (0.41)

nd

ICC

1

0.63

0.53

0.60

0.45

0.55

 

2

0.84

0.77

0.56

0.37

nd

Conclusion: Substantial enhancement of reliability for detection of synovitis by ultrasound may be observed with limited calibration of inexperienced readers. We have identified specific regions that require more intensive calibration, specifically, MCP2 dorsal, PIP2 and 3 palmar, and MTP2 dorsal.

1. Backhaus M, et al. Arthritis Rheum 2009;61:1194


Disclosure:

M. Backhaus,
None;

S. G. Werner,
None;

S. Ohrndorf,
None;

S. Alraqi,
None;

S. Crowther,
None;

S. Dhillon,
None;

N. Dhindsa,
None;

A. J. Fernandes,
None;

O. FitzGerald,
None;

H. B. Hammer,
None;

C. Hudry,
None;

S. Jousse-Joulin,
None;

R. G. Lambert,
None;

M. Larche,
None;

A. Remy-Moulard,
None;

L. Terslev,
None;

R. Yazdani,
None;

R. Dadashova,
None;

J. Paschke,
None;

W. P. Maksymowych,
None.

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